2024 Alaska Ballot Measure 2 Explained
Date: | November 5, 2024 |
Country: | Alaska |
Question: | An Act Restoring Political Party Primaries and Single-Choice General Elections |
Yes: | 160124 |
No: | 160861 |
Mapcaption: | Yes NoOther |
Alaska Ballot Measure 2 was a ballot initiative that was voted on in the November 5, 2024, general election. The ballot measure narrowly failed to pass.[1] [2]
If enacted, it would have repealed Alaska's electoral system of ranked-choice voting and nonpartisan blanket primaries, which was enacted by Alaska Measure 2 from 2020, and return the state to partisan primaries and plurality voting.[3]
Background
The 2020 measure established ranked-choice voting and nonpartisan top-four primaries for all Alaskan state and federal elections except presidential primaries. It passed with a narrow margin of 1%, with supporters of the measure outspending opponents by more than 10 to 1.[4]
In the 2022 Alaska's at-large congressional district special election, Democrat Mary Peltola won in part due to vote splitting between the two Republicans who had advanced to the general election, Nick Begich III and Sarah Palin.[5] [6] This, along with the nonpartisan primary preventing a primary challenge to centrist Republican senator Lisa Murkowski in 2022, led to Republicans increasingly opposing the new system.[7]
Supporters of the initiative have said that Alaska's voting system should be repealed due to being confusing and vulnerable to manipulation, while opponents have said that the system should remain in place due to being more inclusive and giving voters more choices.[3] [7]
Opponents of the measure outspent supporters 100 to 1.[8]
Results
Choice | Votes | % |
---|
For | 159,955 | 49.9 |
Against | 160,619 | 50.1 |
Blank votes | TBA | TBA |
Total | 320,574 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | TBA | TBA | |
Notes and References
- Web site: Media . Eric Stone, Alaska Public Media-Juneau and Liz Ruskin, Alaska Public . November 21, 2024 . Alaska's ranked choice repeal measure fails by 664 votes . November 21, 2024 . Alaska Public Media . en-US.
- Web site: Kitchenman . Andrew . November 21, 2024 . Alaska chooses to keep ranked choice voting, Begich defeats Peltola, unofficial results show • Alaska Beacon . November 21, 2024 . Alaska Beacon . en-US.
- Web site: Ballot Measure 2: Will Alaskans repeal ranked-choice voting & open primaries? . Alaska’s News Source . September 23, 2024.
- Web site: November 18, 2020 . James . Brooks . Alaska becomes second state to approve ranked-choice voting as Ballot Measure 2 passes by 1% . December 6, 2022 . Anchorage Daily News . en . Ballot Measure 2 supporters spent nearly $7 million and campaigned for a year and a half ahead of the election. Opponents raised less than 10% of that total and started formal opposition in fall 2020..
- Web site: Samuels . Iris . October 11, 2022 . Republican U.S. House candidates in Alaska continue to attack each other while urging voters to 'rank the red' . October 15, 2022 . Anchorage Daily News . en . Begich and Palin … split the Republican share of the vote in an August special election, allowing Peltola to come away with the victory.
- Web site: Palin urges Begich to drop House bid; Begich declines . AP . September 5, 2022 . September 23, 2024.
- Web site: Nichanian . Daniel . Sabino . Pascal . Native Leaders Organize to Defend Alaska's Ranked Choice Voting System . Bolts . September 11, 2024 . September 30, 2024.
- Web site: Grove . Casey . Anchorage . Alaska Public Media - . Effort to repeal Alaska's ranked choice voting still holds narrow lead . Alaska Public Media . November 6, 2024 . November 16, 2024.